The main purpose of this ongoing blog will be to track planetary extreme, or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to extreme or record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: U.S. November and Fall Record Scoreboard and Climatological Review
Dear Diary. It’s time once again for our monthly climatological review. Here on this site, we usually present monthly summaries near the 8th of each month, and each is available by clicking the link below:
https://guyonclimate.com/category/record-scoreboard-climatological-reviews/
I’m repeating this mantra every month:
Some people ask me, why track record temperatures? More heat does not affect me, so why should I care? Because record warmth is a big symptom of the climate's health over the last few decades, giving us warning of what may come. Heed the drip drip drip coming into the Titanic. pic.twitter.com/8X958Y1cj2
— Guy Walton (@climateguyw) February 3, 2020
November 2023 using 1901-2000 mean data got ranked by the National Center for Environmental Information for the lower 48 states as 19th warmest, or 111th coolest since records began being kept in 1895.
Fall 2023 using 1901-2000 mean data got ranked by the National Center for Environmental Information for the lower 48 states as 6th warmest, or 124th coolest since records began being kept in 1895.
November 2023 in United States had an average temperature of 44.38F, +1.40F above normal
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 8, 2023
HAWAII Average 77.15F anom. +0.28F
PUERTO RICO:Average 82.7F anom. +2.0F
WARMEST ON RECORD
Fall 2023 in USA (48 Lower States) average
56.08F,+1.57F above normal and 6th warmest on records https://t.co/ZTzH7gzzBM
https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cag/national/rankings
Overall, during November we saw most reports of record warmth coming from every corner of the nation except for the Northeast during the month. Most reports of record chill came from a cold outbreak at the beginning of the month that affected the Midwest and prevented the month from becoming a top ten warmest month. No one state saw below average temperatures. Statistically as a whole, the U.S. had a well above average month:
Overall Fall 2023 was quite warm and did end up being a top ten warmest month. Only the state of South Carolina had near average temperatures.
Here are my two U.S. Daily Record Scoreboards updated through 12/05/2023 (data compiled from the following NCEI site):
https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cdo-web/datatools/records
I’m also keeping tabs on record report totals to verify a scientific study I helped to complete in the decade of the 2000s. We’ll eventually see how skewed ratios of record warm to cold reports get by the year 2100, which the study mentions as 50-1 for DHMX vs. DLMN:
DHMX= Daily High Max Reports. DLMN= Daily Low Min Reports. DHMN= Daily High Min Reports. DLMX=Daily Low Max Reports.
Totals are record reports for the entire United States including all territories minus those from Alaska. I’ve subtracted those from Alaska to get a better representation of what has occurred across the lower 48 states in association with lower 48 state rankings.
Bold red, blue, or purple colored months, such as January 2020 and June 2021, that have ratios of >10 to 1 daily warm low records or <1 to 10 daily warm to low records are either historically hot or cold, most of which have made news. NCEI rankings are for the lower 48 states with the warmest ranking since 1895 of average temperatures being 128 (for ties) or 129 and 1 being the coldest as of 2023. Blue colors represent cold months and red warm. Those months and years with counts close to a 1 to 1 ratio of highs to lows are colored black. All-time record hottest or coldest months and years are boldly colored in purple. NCDC rankings have been color coded (under tabs in each file) such that values of 54 to 74 are black representing neutral months or years (+ or – 10 from the average ranking of 64).
Record numbers statistically matched up well during November of 2023 with that month being the 19th warmest September on record, which was well above average.
November 2023 had approximately a 2 to 1 ratio of record DHMX to DLMN individual record counts, so the color I used for this month was red on the top chart.
November 2023 had approximately a 15 to 4 ratio of record DHMN to DLMX individual record counts, so the color I used for this month was red on the bottom chart.
Due to climate change, we are seeing fewer blue colors on these Record Scoreboards with time.
As stated, the average temperature lower 48 state ranking for November 2023 was 111, which was colored red since it was above average.
I color rankings of +10 to -10 from the average ranking for the lower 48 states of 64.5 black, indicating that these are near average temperature wise. The top warmest ranking for 2023 would be 129 since rankings began in 1895.
We are seeing that December 2023 has gotten off to a warm start. Meteorological models forecast above average temperatures going well into December, so I expect that we will see another high ranked month to round out this year.
Let's see how the temperatures the first week of December have been. 🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/YFuRJz8XoX
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) December 8, 2023
After a relatively cool start to the year, 2023 now has record ratios near those of the first three years of this decade:
Here is much more detailed climatology for November and Fall 2023 as complied by NOAA:
Assessing the U.S. Climate in November 2023
Record-warm seas fuel active Atlantic hurricane season and a lake-effect snowfall buries portions of the Northeast in more than three feet of snow
Key Points:
- Record- warm sea surface temperatures in the Atlantic basin brought 20 named tropical systems during 2023, ranking fourth for the most named storms in a year since 1950. Three of these storms made landfall—Hurricane Idalia and tropical storms Harold and Ophelia.
- The first significant lake-effect snowstorm of the season occurred on November 27–29, bringing snow accumulations of greater than 40 inches to portions of New York state.
- Year-to-date temperatures across the eastern U.S. have been warmer than average in 2023 with 31 states experiencing a top-10 warmest January–November.
- Although no new events were identified in November, a total of 25 separate billion-dollar weather and climate disasters have been confirmed this year—the most events on record during a calendar year. The total cost of these events exceeds $81.0 billion.
- November 2023 was the 19th-warmest November on record for the nation, and precipitation ranked 12th driest in the historical record for the month.
Other Highlights
Temperature
The average temperature of the contiguous U.S. in November was 44.4°F, 2.7°F above average, ranking 19th warmest in the 129-year record. Generally, November temperatures were above average across much of the contiguous U.S., while below-normal temperatures were observed in parts of the Northeast. No state ranked among their top-10 warmest or coldest November on record.
The Alaska statewide November temperature was 20.3°F, 8.6°F above the long-term average, ranking fourth warmest in the 99-year period of record for the state. Above-normal temperatures were observed across the entire state during the month.
The meteorological autumn (September–November) average temperature for the contiguous U.S. was 56.1°F, 2.5°F above average, ranking sixth warmest on record. Temperatures were above average across most of the contiguous U.S., with record-warm temperatures observed in parts of New Mexico, western Texas and northern Maine. New Mexico and Texas each ranked third warmest on record, while Maine ranked fourth warmest for this autumn season. An additional 10 states ranked among their top-10 warmest on record for this period.
The Alaska autumn temperature was 29.6°F, 3.7°F above the long-term average, ranking 13th warmest on the record for the state. Temperatures were above average across most of the state of Alaska while some parts of south-central Alaska saw near-average autumn temperatures.
For January–November, the average contiguous U.S. temperature was 55.8°F, 2.0°F above average, ranking 10th warmest on record for this period. Temperatures were above average from parts of the Southwest to the East Coast and along much of the Northern Tier, with near- to below-average temperatures from the central Rockies to California and in parts of the northern and central Plains. Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi each ranked warmest on record while Massachusetts, Connecticut and Florida each ranked second warmest for the January–November period. An additional 25 states had a top-10 warmest year-to-date period. No state experienced a top-10 coldest January–November.
The Alaska January–November temperature was 30.5°F, 2.5°F above the long-term average, ranking 18th warmest in the historical record for the state. Much of the state was above normal for the 11-month period while temperatures were near average across small parts of western and interior parts of the state.
Precipitation
November precipitation for the contiguous U.S. was 1.38 inches, 0.85 inch below average, ranking 12th driest in the historical record. Precipitation was near to below average across most of the contiguous U.S., while above-normal precipitation was observed in parts of southern California, the Rockies, central and southern Plains and Southeast. No state ranked in their top-10 wettest November on record for this period. On the dry side, Indiana ranked third driest on record for the month, while four additional states in the Midwest ranked among their top-10 driest November on record.
Across the state of Alaska, the average monthly precipitation was 4.62 inches, ranking as the 16th- wettest November in the historical record. Precipitation was above average in parts of the North Slope, Interior and along parts of the Gulf of Alaska, while precipitation was near normal across much of the West Coast and in parts of the Southwest, northeast Interior and Panhandle. Below-normal precipitation was observed in the parts of the Aleutians during the month.
The U.S. autumn precipitation total was 5.66 inches, 1.22 inch below average, ranking 15th driest in the September–November record. Precipitation was below average across much of the eastern half of the U.S., the Southwest, California and in parts of the Northwest and central Plains. Autumn precipitation was above average from the northern Rockies to the western Great Lakes and in parts of the Great Basin, southern Plains, Northeast and Southeast. Tennessee ranked third driest with three additional states in the Mississippi and Ohio Valleys ranking among their top-10 driest autumn season on record. No state ranked in their top-10 wettest on record for the September–November period.
For autumn season precipitation, Alaska ranked in the wettest third of the record with wetter-than-average conditions observed across much of the state. Near-normal precipitation was observed in parts of the Interior and south Central Alaska, while below-normal precipitation occurred in parts of the Southwest and Aleutians during this season.
The January–November precipitation total for the contiguous U.S. was 26.89 inches, 0.70 inch below average, ranking in the driest third of the 129-year record. Precipitation was near to above average across much of the Northeast, from the northern Plains to the West Coast, as well as in parts of the central and southern Plains, northern Great Lakes, Lower Mississippi Valley and Southeast. Wyoming ranked seventh wettest on record, while four additional states ranked among their top-10 wettest for this year-to-date period. Conversely, precipitation was below average from parts of the Southwest to the Gulf of Mexico and in parts of the Northwest, upper and central Mississippi Valley and Mid-Atlantic during the January–November period. Louisiana and Maryland ranked seventh and eighth driest on record, respectively, for this 11-month period.
The January–November precipitation ranked ninth wettest in the 99-year record for Alaska, with above-average precipitation observed across most of the state. Near-normal precipitation was observed in parts of the Southwest, while parts of the Aleutians experienced below-average precipitation during this period.
Other Notable Events
Persistent heat brought above-normal temperatures to much of the U.S. during 2023. Approximately 32 million people were impacted by record heat during the January–November period.
By November 21, more than 39 inches of snow accumulated in Anchorage, Alaska, with this November becoming the snowiest November since record-keeping began in 1953—the previous record was 38.8 inches set in 1994.
Much of the country observed temperatures 10–20°F below average during the late part of November. On the morning of November 29, record-low temperatures occurred over parts of the eastern U.S.
A Kona Low brought heavy rains and flooding to parts of the Hawaiian Islands during late November. Parts of the Big Island received up to 7 inches of rain while higher elevations reported up to 5 inches of snow.
Drought
According to the November 28 U.S. Drought Monitor report, about 36.1% of the contiguous U.S. was in drought, down about 0.4% from the end of October. Moderate to exceptional drought was widespread across much of the Lower Mississippi Valley to the Tennessee Valley, central Great Plains and Southwest, with moderate to extreme drought across parts of the southern Great Plains, Hawaii and in parts of the Florida Peninsula. Moderate to severe drought was present in parts of the Northwest, Mid-Atlantic and New York, as well as moderate drought in parts of the Great Lakes and Puerto Rico.
Drought conditions expanded or intensified across much of the central Mississippi and Ohio valleys, and in parts of the Southwest, central plains, Southeast, Mid-Atlantic, Northeast and Hawaii this month. Drought contracted or was reduced in intensity across much of the Northwest and southern Plains, and in portions of the Southeast, Great Lakes and Puerto Rico.
Monthly Outlook
According to the November 30 One-Month Outlook from the Climate Prediction Center, above-normal monthly average temperatures are favored for much of the contiguous U.S. and parts of northern Alaska in December, with the greatest odds across parts of the Mississippi River Valley. Below-normal temperatures are most likely for parts of Southwest Alaska this month. Much of the Pacific Northwest and parts of the central and southern Plains to the East Coast, as well as eastern Alaska are favored to see above-normal monthly total precipitation while below-normal precipitation is most likely to occur for parts of North Dakota to northern Michigan. Drought improvement or removal is forecast along parts of the Pacific Northwest coast, for parts of the central and southern Plains, Hawaii, and in parts of the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic. Persistence is more likely across much of the Northern Tier, Southwest and upper Midwest.
According to the One-Month Outlook issued on December 1 from the National Interagency Fire Center, the islands of Hawaii have above-normal significant wildland fire potential during the month of December.
This monthly summary from NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information is part of the suite of climate services NOAA provides to government, business, academia and the public to support informed decision-making. For more detailed climate information, check out our comprehensive November 2023 U.S. Climate Report scheduled for release on December 13, 2023. For additional information on the statistics provided here, visit the Climate at a Glance and National Maps webpages.
Here are more “ET’s” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports:
November warm spell seemed the most extreme event in China history,but this is beating it.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 8, 2023
Nearly 500 more records of highest temperature were pulverized today, with margins as high as 4C, including 7 provincial records.
27.8C of Shahe:unprecedented in December in Northern China. https://t.co/wKhRgdAgEv
HISTORIC WARMTH in the KOREAS.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 8, 2023
About half of the stations broke their records today and many more tomorrow.
NORTH KOREA
Nampo 16.3
Kaesong 16.4
Singye 14.5
SOUTH KOREA
Wando 20.3
Gunsan 20.5
Gwanju 19.9
Daejeon 19.2
Cheongju 19.3
Gochang 19.7
Cheonan 18.5
Chungju 17.8
Wonju 17.2 pic.twitter.com/5gnBJqPk5n
Very warm night in parts of Southern Spain,Algarve,Azores and Madeira Islands with temperatures locally at record levels specially in the Azores (18C nightime and 23C daytime).
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 8, 2023
Early next week SE Spain will break records with >25C specially in Murcia. https://t.co/arVw5VaGnq
Records set in 2023:
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) December 8, 2023
⧽ Total atmospheric CO₂, CH₄, NO₂
⧽ Total CO₂ emissions
⧽ Highest daily global temperature anomaly (>2C)
⧽ Hottest year & months
⧽ Highest sea surface temperatures
⧽ Lowest Antarctic sea ice extent
⧽ Highest Earth Energy Imbalance
⧽ What else??
Here is more new November 2023 climatology:
November 2023 in Brazil had an average temperature of 26.8C, +1.5C above normal and was the hottest on records.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 8, 2023
Last 5 months in BRAZIL🇧🇷
Hottest July
Hottest August
Hottest September
Hottest October
Hottest November https://t.co/O22do60uSz
November 2023 in French Guyana was another hot and dry month with all stations except Iracoubo being drier than average (see map).
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 8, 2023
In Cayenne AP average temperature was 28.4C which is 1.2C above normal.
Rainfall anomalies map is courtesy of Meteo France. pic.twitter.com/wa8NF6oYXi
November 2023 in #Ukraine was mild and wet.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 7, 2023
Temperature anomalies were between -1C in the Carpathian mts. to +3C in many areas.
In many areas of the country it was the wettest November in records.
See precipitations totals map by Ukraine Meteorological Service. pic.twitter.com/y24ljA8SAW
November 2023 in #Ethiopia was wet except the Northeast of the country.(left map).
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 8, 2023
A big contrast between the western and southern areas often flooded and the persistent drought in the NW. (see right map). pic.twitter.com/CQw0kcEbLU
November 2023 in Slovakia was close to 1991-2020 normal (anomalies from -0.4 to +1.0 °C) Except high altitudes stations above 2000 m, where it was very cold.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 8, 2023
According to precipitation, it was normal to extremely wet (record wet at 2 stations in the east). 👎 https://t.co/L8HJccfOG7
November 2023 in #Hungary had an average temperature of 6.26C which is 0.83C above normal.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 7, 2023
National average precipitation was 105.8 mm, which is more than double the average of 48.6mm.(9th wettest November on records).
See rainfall totals map by Hungary Meteorological Service. pic.twitter.com/osR3kZvbII
November 2023 in #Bermuda had an average temperature of 21.1C which i s0.7C below normal.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 8, 2023
Total rainfall was 268.7mm ,more than double than the average of 102.1mm. pic.twitter.com/YC2qeZ0KzE
More news and notes from COP28:
‘This may be our last chance’: Cop28 talks enter final phase https://t.co/CAlq0O5cpo
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) December 8, 2023
The current #COP28 proposal to phase out "unabated fossil fuels" (h/t @DrSimEvans) is steeped in deception. Even the best current proofs of concept for carbon capture fail to achieve carbon neutrality and suffer from massive leakage of CO2 into atmosphere. From #NewClimateWar: pic.twitter.com/sA4ubJNmG3
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) December 8, 2023
Yesterday at #COP28, we hosted a panel discussion exploring the role of technology and innovation in enabling the scale-up of #GreenHydrogen and #GreenAmmonia.
— OCP Group (@ocpgroup) December 6, 2023
The event highlighted the growing global interest and investment into the sector.#COP28UAE #SustainableFuture pic.twitter.com/5MIt5WZCDR
BREAKING #COP28 new text on global stocktake
— Simon Evans (@DrSimEvans) December 8, 2023
Now 5 options on fossil fuel phaseout:
1⃣phase out all fossil fuels in line w/ science
2⃣as above + 1.5C + Paris principles
3⃣"unabated" + peak + "predominantly" FF free 2050
4⃣unabated + net-zero
5⃣"no text"https://t.co/NtOc6QPYfw pic.twitter.com/kTcilhS3E1
Former @USAID administrator Rajiv Shah (@rajshah) and I joined Andrea Mitchell on @MSNBC @MitchellReports to discuss the need for progress at the #COP28 climate summit: https://t.co/rLtO9aMJ8m pic.twitter.com/N1bloiRjZy
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) December 8, 2023
Cop 28: global heating could hit 3C, warn politicians, as climate summit continues https://t.co/AbwDCTPCMa
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) December 9, 2023
A conversation from the COP28 climate meeting. https://t.co/pErHRnGohH pic.twitter.com/g8wUVEKsWo
— Dr. William J. Ripple (@WilliamJRipple) December 8, 2023
Here is More Climate and Weather News from Friday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)
"Global surface temperature [briefly] breaches 2℃ mark above baseline" (the problem is when it crosses that threshold permanently, which will happen if we fail to reduce emissions) by @BrianMcHugh2011 for @YorksBylines: https://t.co/vRUZPzp4mM
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) December 8, 2023
"We need to do more as a nation…when America leads the fight, change happens" | Former @USAID administrator Rajiv Shah (@rajshah) and I joined Andrea Mitchell on @MSNBC @MitchellReports to discuss the need for progress at the #COP28 climate summit: https://t.co/rLtO9aMJ8m
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) December 8, 2023
#ClimateFriday Reading: “Every fraction of a degree matters because it can make a big difference in the severity of the impacts of #climatechange.” What happens if the 1.5C target for global heating is missed? https://t.co/LOp3kggL89
— Silicon Valley North (@CCLSVN) December 8, 2023
This is really quite something… #Antarctic sea ice extent is back to a record low for the current date. This is actually below 2016, which was previously a massive outlier in November and December.
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) December 8, 2023
More graphs: https://t.co/V0Lt0w20IQ pic.twitter.com/2X6DJWpn2j
Fascinating (and timely?) new paper on how/why the most extreme #JetStream-level winds will increase substantially in a warming #climate (by 2-3% per °C of warming!). The mechanism? Non-linear changes in meridional *moisture* gradients due to C-C relation. https://t.co/uONipuOK16
— Dr. Daniel Swain (@Weather_West) December 8, 2023
The Amazon used to be the greatest river in the world. It's currently being reduced to a stream in places. Since record-keeping started in 1902, the water levels at Manaus have been at their lowest point in 121 years. pic.twitter.com/0eMhSFuCSn
— Peter Dynes (@PGDynes) December 8, 2023
Drying of Amazon could be early warning of ‘tipping point’ for the rainforest | @ayeshatandon w/ comment from @DavidLapola @DomSpracklen Dr Nils Bochow #COP28 #CBarchive
— Carbon Brief (@CarbonBrief) December 9, 2023
Read ➡️ https://t.co/BPUuIxec1t pic.twitter.com/GT2yRCvnxl
66 million-year history of carbon dioxide says we MUST have a rapid phase-out of 95% of fossil fuels by 2035https://t.co/7y5KIWPUNy #climate #COP28 pic.twitter.com/NIJ0CTYdR2
— Assaad Razzouk (@AssaadRazzouk) December 8, 2023
NEW – Interactive: The pathways to meeting the Paris Agreement’s 1.5C limit | Uta Kloenne, Dr Debbie Rosen, Gaurav Ganti, Dr Alexander Nauels, @CarlSchleussner, @JoeriRogelj, @piersforster, @rtmcswee
— Carbon Brief (@CarbonBrief) December 8, 2023
Design by Tom Pearson and @tomoprater
Read here ➡️ https://t.co/x7OsHGf3wl pic.twitter.com/qqyMPngfdX
Actually, @richardabetts et al have current warming at 1.26C and the 1.5C threshold is crossed at about 2033 **in the absence of rapid decarbonization**.
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) December 8, 2023
1.5C can STILL BE AVOIDED through rapid and aggressive decarbonization. https://t.co/bwhiTpyGoD pic.twitter.com/a5ojyoMdmM
There is a widespread fallacy (spread even by those who know better) that warming has already crossed the 1.5C or even 2C threshold. That is simply false (see e.g. @richardabetts article: https://t.co/17hD0BemG0).
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) December 7, 2023
We must call out unhelpful falsehoods regardless of the source. pic.twitter.com/5jEr7uynSX
The "Canada in a Changing Climate: Synthesis Report" is out! Canada is warming 2x faster than the global average; this report summarizes how climate change is affecting health, infrastructure, & the economy, & what Canadians can do about it. 🍁https://t.co/aYO1DTEPyJ@NRCan pic.twitter.com/HRSI3au5UB
— The Real Prof. Katharine Hayhoe (@KHayhoe) December 8, 2023
#Arctic sea ice extent is currently the *3rd* lowest on record (JAXA data)
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) December 8, 2023
• about 240,000 km² below the 2010s mean
• about 790,000 km² below the 2000s mean
• about 1,450,000 km² below the 1990s mean
• about 1,910,000 km² below the 1980s mean
Plots: https://t.co/tBkW5GBOxd pic.twitter.com/S8S3uVcpjq
#Climatechange and naturally occurring Indian Ocean Dipole combined to increase intensity of rains and devastating floods in Kenya, Ethiopia, and Somalia Oct-Nov, per @WWAttribution.
— World Meteorological Organization (@WMO) December 8, 2023
WMO committed to strengthen #EarlyWarningsForAll in Horn of Africa.https://t.co/7JBSQ151l4 pic.twitter.com/cn6mnOLaSI
New reconstruction of atmospheric CO2 history:
— Kees van der Leun (@Sustainable2050) December 8, 2023
The Miocene (~16 Ma) marks the last time that CO2 concentrations were consistently higher (~480 ppm) than now; Greenland was not yet glaciated at that time, and sea level was some 50 m higher than today. https://t.co/aItvIU7ifn pic.twitter.com/PLYowTiNx0
"As Weather Extremes Increase in 2023, Global Weirding Becomes a Better Term" by Tom @Yulsman for @Discover: https://t.co/pNQTrcMeDF
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) December 9, 2023
Your 'moment of doom' for Dec. 8, 2023 ~ 2024? Temporary? 1.2C in 2023? What is the MET smoking?
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) December 8, 2023
"a temporary exceedance of 1.5C won’t mean a breach of the Paris Agreement. But the first year above 1.5C would certainly be a milestone in climate history.”https://t.co/zpXrWA3IdI
An ice shelf the size of New York City collapsed in East Antarctica last year: https://t.co/YoIwayd4Ab
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 8, 2023
How many more 'historic events' before we #ActOnClimate?#climateemergency #climate #energy #oceans #renewables #GreenNewDeal #cop28 pic.twitter.com/qvod5QFk0T
95% of Democrats, 76% of Independents, and even 50% of Republicans say that the US should design federal policies to cut greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030, according to this @CNN poll. Wow.
— Dr. Genevieve Guenther (@DoctorVive) December 8, 2023
1/3 pic.twitter.com/BPd5b3Awj8
With just 3 weeks left in the year, here's where #Miami's average temperature lies compared to previous years (Jan1-Dec7). For this period in 2023, the average temperature is above 80°F for the first time in recorded history. 7 of top 10 warmest years occurred in the past decade. pic.twitter.com/8wvjUZXQOv
— Brian McNoldy (@BMcNoldy) December 8, 2023
George Monbiot was on fire. He is just brilliant. https://t.co/k6KTqwn2AB
— Paul Noël, Citizen of the pale blue dot, our home (@JunagarhMedia) December 7, 2023
Climate strike week 277. People all over the world are now protesting to demand climate justice from #COP28 currently taking place in Dubai.
— Greta Thunberg (@GretaThunberg) December 8, 2023
We need the fossil fuel lobbyists out of climate negotiations, and no more empty promises!#FridaysForFuture #ClimateStrike #PollutersOut pic.twitter.com/ISUAiTCSYk
Today’s News on Sustainable Energy, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
Good morning with good news: US 2023 solar additions will set a new record, jumping to 33 GW! The previous record was 23.6 GW in 2021. Solar additions are up ~55% compared to 2022.
— John Raymond Hanger (@johnrhanger) December 8, 2023
US solar capacity will total 162 GWs in 2023, jumping to 377 GW in 2028.https://t.co/ywK1tv42eA pic.twitter.com/Zow1Vh1Q75
Asking for a friend:
— @TXsharon Methane Hunter (@TXsharon) December 8, 2023
When running out of water, would you immediately think: Let's drink drilling/#fracking waste⁉️Or might you first consider stopping the destruction of trillions of gallons of water by the #oilandgas industry? https://t.co/cLmTYw9WsW.
“how far back in time could this year’s total carbon removal take us?
— Dr. Jonathan Foley (@GlobalEcoGuy) December 8, 2023
Right now, the answer is somewhere around 10 seconds.” https://t.co/IP6DmvwMSn
South Australia went from 1% renewables in 2007 to 68% in just over 15 years. It's on track for 100% renewable energy by 2030.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 8, 2023
It can be done.
We have the solutions. Implement them. #ActOnClimate#climate #energy #renewables #solar #wind #cop28 pic.twitter.com/4Dpx6Xd3lC
Huge: The first 5 turbines of the huge Vineyard Wind offshore wind farm will soon deliver power to the Massachusetts grid! Those 5 turbines have 65 MW of Vineyard's 806 MW. Vineyard 1 is 6x larger than South Fork that delivered first power this week to NY.https://t.co/xU1dTPZnxE
— John Raymond Hanger (@johnrhanger) December 8, 2023
More from the Weather Department:
While December often brings to mind thoughts other than severe weather, an uptick is possible.
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) December 8, 2023
Here's the average tornado risk for the month: pic.twitter.com/2T5kq5fHQC
Severe storms return to the south, and we can't rule out #tornadoes. Flooding will also be an issue the next few days. Stay with @weatherchannel as we time it all out. pic.twitter.com/PUASGUZcF4
— Kelly Cass (@kellycass) December 8, 2023
Latest SPC Storm Prediction Center storm outlooks the next 3 days. Strong line of storms brewing dipping towards the upper Gulf then eastward. https://t.co/Hk3pbO7x8H pic.twitter.com/NiP5toyzJ4
— Mike's Weather Page (@tropicalupdate) December 8, 2023
Delivering an important forecast to your pocket within a polygon instantaneously — never thought when I was young that this would be how folks saw my forecasts.
— Matthew Cappucci (@MatthewCappucci) December 8, 2023
I can’t wait to see what we can do with technology in another ten years. https://t.co/Cj8URgq3MQ pic.twitter.com/RH8TTJzRuu
Make your outdoor plans and errand day on Saturday if you live in the Northeast. Sunday into Monday will be a super soaker with Flood Watches in effect. 1-3" expected. River flooding and Urban Flooding expected in spots. Stay safe! Timing it out @weatherchannel pic.twitter.com/40TdfkE6ed
— Jacqui Jeras (@JacquiJerasTV) December 8, 2023
New blog post on the remarkable Pacific jet extension currently being depicted by all the major modeling ensembles and what it might mean in terms of a much more active California weather pattern by the end of Dec. https://t.co/tjRlTcvGDO #CAwx #CAwater
— Dr. Daniel Swain (@Weather_West) December 9, 2023
For folks in #Maryland, #DC, NJ, and #NY– take your inflatable Santa down Saturday night. If not, it will not be there Monday. #storm
— Dan Satterfield (@wildweatherdan) December 8, 2023
Given the widespread warmth across North America it is not surprising that #snow cover extent is going in the wrong direction for a time of year when snow cover should be advancing now approaching decadal lows. pic.twitter.com/4Vh2iYakBu
— Judah Cohen (@judah47) December 8, 2023
Ho-Ho-Hold it #Santa!! We are going to need tires instead of skis on that sleigh if this keeps up!! @foxweather @spann #nowinter pic.twitter.com/0SLHhX3k6M
— Tom Niziol (@TomNiziol) December 8, 2023
Merry Christmas Eve from the GFS. 🎅 pic.twitter.com/iAf06iEYle
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) December 8, 2023
937mb north Atlantic gale!! pic.twitter.com/qvgrwEDXPr
— Jim Cantore (@JimCantore) December 8, 2023
WORD OF THE WEEK 💬
— American Meteorological Society (@ametsoc) December 8, 2023
Graupel—Heavily rimed snow particles, often called snow pellets; often indistinguishable from very small soft hail except for the size convention that hail must have a diameter greater than 5 mm.
Read more through the AMS Glossary: https://t.co/CjTOfCKvrq pic.twitter.com/9KScMcssVa
More on the Environment and Nature:
Over 45 million acres (18.4 million hectares) have burned across Canada as of November 2023, or about 5% of the country’s forests. The fires released an estimated 400 million metric tons of carbon dioxide into the air, nearly triple the previous record set in 2014. pic.twitter.com/iwkbQq8eG7
— Nahel Belgherze (@WxNB_) December 8, 2023
“If the bees disappear off the surface of the globe then man would only have four years of life left. No more bees, no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more man.”
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 8, 2023
Protect #nature in all its forms #ActOnClimate#SaveTheBees #Climate #energy #GreenNewDeal pic.twitter.com/NXsApkeKTf
You may not know this but…
— WWF (@WWF) December 8, 2023
Nature is our greatest ally in tackling the #ClimateCrisis. Take care of it, and it will take care of us right back. 🌍
To protect our planet, we need to work WITH nature instead of AGAINST nature. #COP28 @climateWWF pic.twitter.com/0WA0GALkEe
Horrible news… https://t.co/8Axs8gHOj8
— NOAA Climate.gov (@NOAAClimate) December 8, 2023
Nothing does the soul more good than the sound of running water, the rustling of leaves, the chirping of birds and the smell of the forest. We should spend our lives in nature more often than at home in front of the computer or television.💚🌱☘️🌿🌲🌳🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/mbxiaS7Tz4
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) December 8, 2023
All aboard the Polar Express! 🚂❄️
— WeatherNation (@WeatherNation) December 8, 2023
This morning, the Cog Railway depot station in Colorado Springs transformed into a picturesque winter wonderland!
This train goes all the way to the top of Pikes Peak at 14k+ feet in elevation! #COwx pic.twitter.com/GY9UJFlx5D
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
This absolutely stunning halo illuminated the sky over Granby, CO, on Wednesday morning! ☀️
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) December 8, 2023
Halos are created by the sun shining through ice crystals in cirrus clouds high up in the atmosphere.
📷: @Tim_Pfeiffer pic.twitter.com/HK233VEwVK
A man on a nature walk in Wisconsin recently captured a magical snowy scene as a deer calmly kept watch. pic.twitter.com/1ROWZS6Som
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) December 7, 2023
The beauty of our planet is unparalleled, and protecting both nature and communities vulnerable to climate change is our most important duty. #ActOnClimate https://t.co/9f0mX4ekjV
— Greenpeace International (@Greenpeace) December 8, 2023
Night thoughts
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) December 8, 2023
It's actually pretty easy to understand…even for politicians and decision makers💚🌱☘️🌿🌲🌳🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/llpvwD4XBS
I wish my beloved and much appreciated fellow inhabitants of planet Earth a relaxed and love-filled good evening, a blessed night and a fantastic start to the weekend on the journey of life. Stay kind and healthy, may God bless you❤️💙💚🌱☘️🌿🌲🌳🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/WTJDhxSgPU
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) December 8, 2023